89 Mo. 340 | Mo. | 1886
This action was begun by plaintiffs, to recover damages sustained by their goods, consisting of silks and other valuable dry goods, whilst in defendant’s possession, as a common carrier. Upon a trial in the circuit court, plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment in their favor, for $6184.29, from which defendant appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals, where the same was affirmed, and defendant has appealed therefrom to this court.
The goods, when damaged, were in course of transportation from New York to East St. Louis, by “The South Shore Line,” which it appears did a “transportation business” over several connected railroads, including that of the defendant. The merchandise arrived at Toledo on the eleventh day of February, 1881, and the car, being in a crippled condition, was sent to the transfer house, where the goods were unloaded and placed on the platform at 2:30 o’clock, p. m., of said day, at which time, the defendant gave its receipt for the goods to the connecting road. This transfer house, it seems, is a place where freight going in both directions, east and west, is exchanged by numerous railroads connecting at Toledo, and as also appears, freight thus passing through said exchange depot, is, in the usual and ordinary course of business, subject to some necessary and unavoidable delay, occasioned by the switching, unload-
About midnight on said February eleventh the waters from a flood in the Maumee River reached the railroad tracks at the transfer house, and soon rose high enough to submerge and damage plaintiffs’ dry goods whilst in said car at the platform awaiting shipment. The evidence offered in plaintiffs’ behalf, as well as that for defendant, shows that the waters in which said goods were submerged, as charged in the petition, were the waters of an extraordinary flood occurring in the Maumee River. The character and magnitude of this flood is not called in question, but on the contrary is conceded to have been unprecedented, and such as is denominated an act of God, properly so-called. There is further evidence, also, offered by plaintiffs tending, at least in some degree, to support the allegation in the
The second instruction given at plaintiffs’ instance is as follows :
“2. If the jury believe that plaintiffs’ goods were injured while in the possession of defendant as common carrier for transportation, it is incumbent on the defendant to establish, by a fair preponderance of evidence, that the damage or loss was the result immediately and proximately of the ‘ act of Gí-od.’ Proof by plaintiff of the damage and loss of the goods while in the possession of defendant, as aforesaid, makes a prima facie case of negligence or misconduct on the part of defendant, which must be overcome by proof that the injury was the result of an inevitable accident, or, in other words, an act of Gí-od, and not its own negligence or misconduct.”
If the preponderance of all the evidence does not establish that the direct, immediate and efficient cause of the injury was an inevitable flood or inundation, the defendant is liable, and although the cause of the loss may have been an act of Gí-od, such as a great flood, in the Maumee river, yet, if the defendant unnecessarily exposed the goods of plaintiff to such peril by any culpable or negligent act or omission of its own, it is not excused. The doctrine this instruction announces on this subject as to the burden of proof, presents we think a serious difficulty in the case, and its propriety in view of the evidence and in connection with other instructions given in the cause, is the question we now propose to discuss briefly. '
It is familiar doctrine that the law imposes upon the common carrier the obligation of safety, as to goods whilst in his possession, and unless relieved from-liability by the act of Gí-od, or the public enemy, he is responsible in damages although there may be no actual negligence on his part. Whenever the loss occurs, from
Where, as in the case before us, the act of Grod appears in the testimony in plaintiffs’ behalf, as a cause of the damage, is the onus, in that event, on the defendant, and does the presumption of law, thus declared in the instruction, then exist? May the plaintiff, under this state of facts, ignore such exception appearing in the evidence in his behalf, and insist on this legal presumption, whilst proving, at the same time, the existence, in the case, of one of the exemptions, which releases the defendant? The right of recovery must, in
In the case of Wolf v. Express Co., 43 Mo. 423, the wine, which was the subject of the controversy, arrived at East St. Louis the thirty-first of December and was taken in severe 'weather from the cars and stored and •exposed on a platform for a number of days and thereby became frozen and damaged. The jury were told that the burden of proving that the injury complained of was caused by the act of Gfod rested upon the defendant in the first instance, and then they were further told, that if the defendant permitted said wine to lie carelessly exposed and become damaged thereby, they would find for plaintiff. The instructions were approved, and they
The court of appeals in its opinion in this case uses the following language upon this subject: “It is true, that when the evidence for plaintiff shows damage, and at the. same time a vis major, sufficient in itself to account for the damage, there is no presumption that the negligence of the carrier, rather than the vis major, was the efficient cause of the damage. The general rule laid down in instruction number two, might perhaps by amplification have been made more fully and exactly applicable to the case presented by the evidence. But the whole instruction taken together was not, we think, misleading.” In this view, we are unable, upon the ground indicated, to concur. We think it erroneous, under the authorities of this court which we have cited' and that it is contradictory and irreconcilable with the
“ The court further instructs the jury that if -the •evidence shows that the inj ury to plaintiffs’ goods was •caused by a sudden, violent and extraordinary flood, at the city of Toledo, whilst the goods of plaintiffs were in the cars, in the transfer house at Toledo, the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant, unless the plaintiffs have shown that the defendant- was guilty of some specific negligence, with reference to the goods, which actively eo-oj)erated with the act of God to produce the injury.”
This correct instruction for defendant was neutralized and lost to it, by the misleading and contradictory instruction number two, supra, given for the plaintiffs. It will be observed that it was not only charged in the petition that defendant negligently permitted the goods of plaintiff to be submerged,but it was also charged that defendant negligently permitted the goods of plaintiff to remain in bulk, wet, after they had been submerged. If this was so, it was a breach of duty, for which defendant would be liable for any aggravation of damages so occasioned. It was the duty of defendant to preserve the property and limit the damages as far as it could by the exercise of all reasonable and practicable diligence.
The fourth instruction given for plaintiffs submits this question to the jury in an instruction which we think is unexceptionable in form and phraseology. But we are not satisfied that there was any sufficient evidence in the case authorizing it. In this behalf the court of appeals say: “There was evidence that the car could have been opened on February 13, but I do not find any evidence tending to show that the goods would have been benefited by opening the car then or that further damage would have been thereby-prevented, or how far the goods were injured by not
For these reasons we are of opinion that the judgment of the court of appeals as well as that of the circuit court, should be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity herewith and it is so ordered.